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Healthcare Professionals, Advocates Push Congress For Higher Reimbursement In Mental Health Legislation
Modern Healthcare (2/24, Hellmann, Subscription Publication) reports healthcare professionals, “patient advocates and key lawmakers are taking aim at health insurers as Congress drafts legislation to tackle the behavioral health crisis, arguing that low reimbursement rates and restrictions on coverage are limiting access to care.” Lawmakers “are looking to toughen enforcement of mental health parity laws and address a reimbursement paradigm that” healthcare professionals “say undervalues behavioral healthcare.” The article adds that healthcare professionals and health insurance companies “agree on one key problem: Increasingly fewer behavioral health professional accept private or public insurance, so their patients must pay out of pocket.” American Psychiatric Association CEO and medical director Dr. Saul Levin said, “I need to make sure that all of my psychiatrists come back into the system if they’ve opted out of it, and ensuring parity of payment is really important to that.”
Related Links:
— “Providers push for higher reimbursement as Congress debates mental health legislation “Jessie Hellmann, Modern Healthcare, February 24, 2022
Certain Populations Affected By Eating Disorders May Be Underrepresented In US-Based Clinical Trials
Healio (2/24, Holden) reports, “Older adults, children, men and certain racial and ethnic groups were found to be underrepresented in U.S.-based clinical trials on eating disorders,” investigators concluded after reviewing data from “21 interventional trials conducted within the U.S.” and then collecting “data on age, sex, race, ethnicity and primary diagnosis, which was classified as anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder or other.” The findings were published online Feb. 21 in a research letter in JAMA Network Open.
Related Links:
— “Men, some ethnic groups underrepresented in US eating disorder clinical trials “Lisa Holden, Healio, February 24, 2022
FDA Issues Another Warning About Dangers Posed By Tianeptine
HealthDay (2/23, Mozes) reports, “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has issued another pointed warning about the dangers posed by tianeptine, an antidepressant that is not approved for any type of medical treatment in the United States.” Topping this “list of possible risks from taking the drug: accidental poisoning and addiction.” The FDA stated in the warning, “In the U.S., reports of bad reactions and unwanted effects involving tianeptine are increasing. … Poison control center cases involving tianeptine exposure have increased nationwide, from 11 total cases between 2000 and 2013 to 151 cases in 2020 alone.
Related Links:
— “FDA Warns of Rising Dangers of Unapproved Drug Tianeptine “Alan Mozes, CNN, February 23, 2022
Study: Firearms surpass motor vehicle crashes as leading cause of death by trauma
CNN (2/23, Ahmed, Elamroussi) reports “firearm deaths have overtaken car crashes” as “the leading cause of death by trauma in the U.S., according to a…study” that found “in 2017, there were 1.44 million years of potential life lost due to firearm deaths, edging out that of motor vehicle crashes (1.37 million years).” The trend “continued in 2018,” the findings published in Trauma Surgery and Acute Care Open revealed.
Also, The Hill (2/23, Choi) reports that according to the findings, “the majority of the nearly 40,000 firearms deaths – 85.4% – occurred among men.” For the study, researchers reviewed data from the CDC’s National Vital Statistics Reports between 2009 and 2018.
Related Links:
— “Guns overtake car crashes as leading cause of US trauma-related deaths, study says “Tasnim Ahmed and Aya Elamroussi, CNN, February 23, 2022
Extreme Heat Days Over Last Decade Appear To Be Tied To Increased Mental Health-Related ED Visits Among US Adults, Claims Data Suggest
MedPage Today (2/23, Grant) reports, “The hottest days on record over the last decade were linked with increased mental health-related emergency department (ED) visits among U.S. adults,” investigators concluded. After using “medical claims data from 2010 to 2019, extreme heat days – the 95th percentile for warm-season temperature distribution,” researchers found they “were associated with a modestly higher rate of ED visits for any mental health condition.” The findings were published online Feb. 23 in JAMA Psychiatry.
Healio (2/23, Gramigna) also covers the study.
Related Links:
— MedPage Today (requires login and subscription)
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